Living Bird Spring 2023—Table Of Contents
Feature Articles
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A Modest Proposal: Can eBird Help Choose Better State Birds? [Part 1]
We love cardinals, mockingbirds, and meadowlarks, too—but do these 3 species have to represent 18 separate states? We turned to eBird to find alternative state birds with data to back them up.
By Matt Smith and Marc Devokaitis
Part 2: Robins, Chickadees, Goldfinches, and Bluebirds
Part 3: Birds That Mostly Don’t Live in Their State
Part 4: Native Species and a Few Surprises
Part 5: Can eBird Help Canada Choose Better Provincial Birds?
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Costa Ricans Join Hands to Cultivate a Quetzal Community
The retired editor of Birds of North America finds a slice of Costa Rica where the regal Resplendent Quetzal has inspired communion among farms and tourist lodges, birds and people.
Essay by Alan Poole -
At Famed Walden Pond, Spring Is Coming Earlier Than It Did in Thoreau’s Day
The detailed record of bird sightings and phenological observations around Concord, Massachusetts—from Thoreau’s notes 170 years ago to today’s studies by scientists at Boston University—provides a key to studying how climate change is affecting bird migration.
By Amanda S. Gallinat and Richard B. Primack; Photography by Tim Laman -
A Poet-Ornithologist Walks Walden Pond, From Boise to Concord
“I first met Thoreau in my junior high English composition and American literature classes. Most of my peers didn’t take to Emerson, Thoreau, and Whitman, but I did. Even if removed from my own life by more than a century, there was this hint of kindred spiritedness, across time and race and place, that appealed to me.”
Essay by J. Drew Lanham; Photography by Tim Laman -
Bright Lights and Big Data: Radar Ornithology and the Rise of BirdCast
A small group of innovative researchers cracked the secret of bird migration—and then set about applying that knowledge to save birds from the hazards of city lights.
By Rebecca Heisman
Columns & Departments
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When Will Spring Bird Migration Hit Its Peak? BirdCast Has Answers
Spring migration timing varies across the U.S. and even within regions, according to radar data analyzed by BirdCast.
By Gustave Axelson and Pat Leonard -
The Cornell Lab Review: Affordable Full-Size 8×42 Binoculars
We reviewed more than two dozen pairs of 8×42 binoculars—a popular, versatile choice for most kinds of birdwatching. Here’s what we learned.
By Marc Devokaitis and Hugh Powell -
Whitebark Pine Tree Gets Endangered Species Act ProtectionBy Gustave Axelson
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Smithsonian Adds Bird Friendly Certification for ChocolateBy Marc Devokaitis
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Recovering America’s Wildlife Act Fails in Final Days of 117th CongressBy Gustave Axelson
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Birdword: An Illustrated Guide to Some Tongue-Twisting Ornithological TermsBy Living Bird staff writers
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Gallery: Who Really Painted These Resplendent Quetzals?Art by Elizabeth Gould; Text by Jillian Ditner
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